Pan-Africanism - Pasthound
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Topic: Pan-Africanism



  
 Pan African Movement
One, if Pan Africanism did not exist before we would have had to create it now.
Regionalism may not be the half way house towards Pan Africanism but a hospice to unity.
There is resurgence in Pan Africanism in a number of ways and among different forces for a variety of reasons.
http://www.panafricanmovement.org/Africanism.htm   (3541 words)

  
 Pan-African Studies Events
"The Future of Pan Africanism in an Age of Globalization": The event brings together two giants of the Pan-African intellectual and activist tradition who will discuss the ramifications of current political, economic and cultural trends in globalization on the future of Pan-Africanism.
"Remembering and Renewing the Mission of the Department of Pan African Studies": The event kicks off the anniversary celebration by highlighting a vital component of the Department of Pan African Studies' mission: local and global community outreach.
Dept. of Pan African Studies, U of L, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
http://www.louisville.edu/a-s/pas/events.html   (1014 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Pan-Africanism, Africa History (African History) - Encyclopedia
Thereafter, as independence was achieved by more African states, other interpretations of Pan-Africanism emerged, including: the Union of African States (1960), the African States of the Casablanca Charter (1961), the African and Malagasy Union (1961), the Organization of Inter-African and Malagasy States (1962), and the African-Malagasy-Mauritius Common Organization (1964).
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > African History > Pan-Africanism
Pan-Africanism as an intergovernmental movement was launched in 1958 with the First Conference of Independent African States in Accra, Ghana.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/P/PanAfric.html   (570 words)

  
 Pan African Women's Liberation Organization
PAWLO aims at creating awareness among the people about the role of Pan Africanism, and in particular the role of women in the African Liberation struggles.
Advocacy about the role of Pan Africanism, and in particular the role of women in African Liberation struggles
Increased participation of women in the Pan African Congresses, while putting gender issues at the center of the Pan African Movement Agenda, while continuously assessing progress made towards achieving resolutions of the Congresses.
http://www.wougnet.org/Profiles/pawlo.html   (313 words)

  
 Pan Africanism in the African Diaspora - An Anlysis of Modern Afrocentric Political Movements - Ronald W. Walters
Pan Africanism in the African Diaspora - An Anlysis of Modern Afrocentric Political Movements - Ronald W. Walters
More than a historical overview of the Pan-Africanism movement, this book analyzes important case studies of Black political movements since the 1960's and the impact of the movements on the African American community.
Walters fashions a unique and radically new perspective and model for addressing the age-old question of the African continuum by advancing the notion that Pan-Africanism can be about the struggle for community—a struggle not incompatible with efforts to change the State.
http://wsupress.wayne.edu/africana/afrlabor/walterspaad.htm   (232 words)

  
 pan-africanism.doc
Like Pan-Slavism in Eastern Europe and the forms of romantic nationalism that created modern Germany and Italy, early Pan-Africanism reflected a philosophical tradition, derived from the German philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder (1744-1803).
In Herder's opinion, peoples (or, as they were often called, nations) such as the Slavs, Germans, and Italians, were the central actors of world history.
http://blackminds1.homestead.com/files/pan-africanism.doc   (232 words)

  
 ASQ -- Pan-African History: Political Figures from Africa and the Diaspora Since 1787. Hakim Adi and Marika Sherwood
The authors argue rightly that there has never been a universally-accepted definition of what Pan-Africanism stands for and entails.
This should help the student of African studies explore the historical evolution of Pan-Africanism.
Most often it is black nationalists such as Malcolm X, who is covered in the book, that have been viewed as typical of a “Pan-Africanist” political figure.
http://www.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v8/v8i2a10.htm   (699 words)

  
 The Story of Africa BBC World Service
He thought the declaration dangerously extreme and soon abandoned the idea of Pan Africanism.
This found expression in a series of Pan-African meetings.
W.E.B. DuBois, the man who had organised the first Pan African Congress back in 1919, was there too at the age of 77.
http://bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/storyofafrica/13chapter5.shtml   (730 words)

  
 Pan-Africanism - Columbia Encyclopedia® article about Pan-Africanism
Thereafter, as independence was achieved by more African states, other interpretations of Pan-Africanism emerged, including: the Union of African States (1960), the African States of the Casablanca Charter (1961), the African and Malagasy Union (1961), the Organization of Inter-African and Malagasy States (1962), and the African-Malagasy-Mauritius Common Organization (1964).
Pan-Africanism, general term for various movements in Africa that have as their common goal the unity of Africans and the elimination of colonialism and white supremacy from the continent.
The OAU struggled with border disputes, aggression or subversion against one member by another, separatist movements, and the collapse of order in member states.
http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Pan-Africanism   (570 words)

  
 Articles - Pan-Africanism
Today, Pan Africanism is a large part of modern culture, and pan african symbolism is used to express counter culture and resistance to oppression all around the world, in a diverse number of issues.
The term Pan Africanism commonly is used to mean solidarity among indigenous, or black Africans.
The Pan-Africanist perspective is one of common cause with citizens of other African nations, as a result of shared history and shared struggle against a number of threats and challenges, among them: racism, white supremacy, slavery, colonialist exploitation, neocolonialism, and imperialism.
http://www.gaple.com/articles/Pan_Africanism   (629 words)

  
 African History - Pan-Africanism
See also Towards a United Africa covering the evolution of Pan-Africanism, the OAU to the AU, the text of historic speeches by Africa's heads of state at the formation on the OAU and other historic documents on African unity.
It is an "introduction to Blyden's Africanist ideas and his vision of the role of African Americans in the future of Africa." "...given at the 1992 Pan African Congress of North America held in Savannah, Georgia, USA." Includes a biographical outline and bibliography.
A Benin fabric panel honoring the 1987 centennial of Marcus Garvey's birth which depicts Garvey as politician, scholar, admiral is used to illustrate a conference, Prophets, Visionaries and their Publics in the Afro-Atlantic World, October 9-10, 1998, at the University of Maryland.
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/history/hispanafrican.html   (1083 words)

  
 Refuting Racial Myths -- Correcting the misinformation at racial_myths
France has flirted with Gallo-Romanism, Celticism and Gallicism; the Slavic peoples with Pan-Slavism, and the Turks with Pan-Turanism, the Negroes with Pan-Africanism, the people of Asia with Pan-Asianism, and the Italians under Mussolini with Neo-Romanism.
But these ideologies were for the most part pale imitations of the doctrine of racial superiority, known variously as Aryanism, Nordicism, Teutonism, Gobinism, Anglo-Saxonism, and Anthropo-Sociology or Social Selectionism, which developed in northwestern Europe.
Coon (1939) notes that these ideas "agree with and supplement the findings of archaeology and of physical anthropology".
http://www.white-history.com/refuting_rm/9.html   (9534 words)

  
 Pan-Africanism: Writings of George Padmore and Kwame Nkrumah & the Maoist view
Pan-Africanism, Pan-Arabism, Pan-Slavic and Turananian nationalism: Progressive or reactionary pans?
MIM's favorite quotes from African revolutionary and Pan-Africanist Kwame Nkrumah
The Sixth Pan-African Congress was mostly Africans, thanks to the upsurge of anti-imperialist struggle in Africa.
http://www.etext.org/Politics/MIM/countries/panafrican   (550 words)

  
 camfubu 3
Pan-Africanism is an idea that is both simple to understand yet complex in trying to bring about its successful application.
As previous examples show, It makes us of the prefix pan, applying it to African people.
The word African, whatever its origin, is the accepted identification of the indigenous people of Africa (also known in antiquity as Ethiopians, Nubians, Nguni /WaBantu, Twa, KhoiSan, etc.), as well as their descendants and kinsmen in the Diaspora and the Pacific Islands.
http://www.annetteclark.co.uk/camfubu/camfubu3b.htm   (550 words)

  
 Pan, finding nemo cake pan, pan wei bo
Pan africanism Peter pan movie Character cake pans Pan tilt Pot and pans Peter pan and tinkerbell Pan pipe Muffin pans Wilton cake pans Pan american airline
Pan pacific hotel san francisco Peter pan picture Bundt pans Pan american highway Pan and scan Peter pan National pan hellenic council Pan asian Tin pan alley Pan de vida
Pan wei bo Pan american hotel Finding nemo cake pan Aluminum pans Oil pans Adult peter pan costume Pan pt42pd3p Care bear cake pan Pan malaysian pool All clad pan
http://www.lookfood.com/pan.html   (352 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Books: Nkrumah's Ghana and East Africa: Pan-Africanism and African Interstate Relations
Nkrumah's Ghana and East Africa: Pan-Africanism and African Interstate Relations
Top of Page : Nkrumah's Ghana and East Africa: Pan-Africanism and African Interstate Relations
Look for books like Nkrumah's Ghana and East Africa: Pan-Africanism and African Interstate Relations by subject:
http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0838634567   (143 words)

  
 Black America Today / RON DANIELS: Promoting Pan-Africanism in the 21st Century
Pan Africanism was grounded in the duel reality of the commonality of culture and history and the recognition that despite ethnic differences, the European oppressor treated all Africans, all peoples with darker skin the same - as captives, slaves and colonial subjects.
Pan Africanism is the order of the day and the Institute of the Black World will work to make it a functional reality in the 21st century.
Historically the architects of Pan Africanism sought to combine the positive and negative of the global African experience to create a unifying ideology to serve as the cement for racial solidarity.
http://www.blackamericatoday.com/article.cfm?ArticleID=326   (143 words)

  
 Pan-Africanism
Today, Pan Africanism is a large part of modern culture, and pan african symbolism is used to express counter culture and resistance to oppression all around the world, in a diverse number of issues.
The term Pan Africanism commonly is used to mean solidarity among indigenous, or black Africans.
The Pan-African Congress was responsible for much of the radicalization of the fight against apartheid, because prior to it pacifist ideas held greater sway.
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/P/Pan-Africanism.htm   (594 words)

  
 BLS%20302.doc
Blyden, Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race Hollis Lynch (ed.), Black Spokesman: Selected Published Writings of Edward W. Blyden The American Society of African Culture (ed.), Pan-Africanism Reconsidered Vincent B. Thompson, Africa and Unity: The Evolution of Pan-Africanism_ Ras Makonnen, Pan-Africanism From Within, edited by Kenneth King C.L.R. James, History of the Pan-African Revolts J.
4) Hollis R. Lynch, Edward Wilmot Blyden, Pan Negro Patriot, 1832-1912, New York: Oxford University Press, 1967.
*Lynch, H. (ed), Black Spokesman, Edward Wilmot Blyden (excerpts) Lynch, H. (ed.), Edward Wilmot Blyden, Pan-Negro Patriot Mehlinger, L. R., "The Attitude of the Free Negro Toward African Colonization," Journal of Negro History, Vol.
http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~aymouke/BLS%20302.doc   (594 words)

  
 Revolutionary Pan-African Movement
The great Pan-Africanism Osagefyo Kwame Nkrumah understood that the ultimate success of the Revolutionary Pan-African Movement was the organization of the masses under a Pan-African Political Party, not confined by the artificial barriers imposed on Africa, and the African world, by imperialism.
The All-African People’s Revolutionary Party (AAPRP) is a permanent, independent, revolutionary, socialist, Pan-African Political Party based in Africa, the just homeland of African People all over the world.
It is only through a Revolutionary Mass Pan-African political party that we will effectively establish a one unified socialist Africa.
http://members.aol.com/aaprpmidwest/paf.html   (594 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Peter Abrahams not only subscribed to the principles of Pan-Africanism as articulated by W. Du Bois, he was also in agreement with many African patriots that the struggle for independence in Ghana as directed by Kwame Nkrumah was the prelude of the upcoming Africa Revolution.
At the same time that Abrahams and Wright were making their particular philosophic shifts, George Padmore renounced Marxism and in order to re-inventing Pan-Africanism as a philosophy of black modernity while in the process of switching his location from Moscow to London.
The intellectual exchanges between Richard Wright and Peter Abrahams in the late 1940s and in the early 1950s regarding the consequential nature of African modernity was really about the meaning of Pan-Africanism in the African Diaspora in contrast to its contextual location in Africa.
http://pzadmin.pitzer.edu/masilela/general/essays/abrahams.htm   (594 words)

  
 Pan-Africanism: Writings of George Padmore and Kwame Nkrumah & the Maoist view
Kwame Nkrumah was a leader at the Fifth Pan-African Congress.
Africa is a whole continent, not just a country, but the idea behind Pan-Africanism today is that it should be one country.
The Fifth Pan-African Congress said that armed struggle to oust colonialism could be justified.
http://www.etext.org/Politics/MIM/countries/panafrican   (550 words)

  
 RaceandHistory.com - PAN AFRICANS ON THE RISE AGAIN
Pan Africanism was being gradually pushed off the African agenda since United States imperialism organised the military coup de tat which overthrew of Kwame Nkrumah in 1966.Nkrumah’s Convention Peoples Party was rent asunder.
The PAC was and still is the torch bearer of Pan Africanism in Southern Africa.
This was the commemoration of the Pan African Conference organ ised by Trinidadian born Henry Sylvester Williams.
http://www.raceandhistory.com/historicalviews/panafricanrise.htm   (1890 words)

  
 For a Democratic Egalitarian Socialist Pan African Union
This year represents 100 years of organised Pan Africanism.
Consequently, we must proceed with caution to ensure that we do not get a Pan African Union where confusion reigns, where imperialism is still able to rape and plunder Africa's resources while the masses of our African sisters and brothers and their children continue to languish in poverty.
Year 2000, the first year of the twenty first century is very auspicious for Africa and the Africans wherever we may live on our planet earth, and especially so for Pan Africanists.
http://www.mathaba.net/africa/llopen.html   (1890 words)

  
 The History Of African Liberation Day
African Liberation Day as an institution within the Pan-African movement reflects the growth and development of Pan-Africanism.
When Pan-Africanism was faced with fighting colonialism, the focus of African Liberation Day was on the anti-colonial struggle and the fight for national independence.
African Liberation Day has contributed to the struggle to raise the level of political awareness and organization in African communities worldwide.
http://www.thetalkingdrum.com/ald.html   (708 words)

  
 Learn more about List of Isms in the online encyclopedia.
Pabloism, pacifism, paganism, paleoconservatism, pan-Africanism, pan-Arabism, panentheism, pantheism, pan-Germanism, pan-Slavism, pantheism, papism, patriotism, Patripassianism, Pelagianism, Pentecostalism, Peronism, pessimism, phallocentrism, pharaonism, phenomenalism, philhellenism, Pilgerism, plagiarism, playganism, platonism, political absolutism, polycentrism, polytheism, populism, positivism, postcolonialism, post-Freudianism, postimpressionism, post-Keynesianism, postmodernism, poststructuralism, post-Zionism, pragmatism, Presbyterianism, priapism, primitivism, progressivism, Protestantism, proto-capitalism, Psilanthropism, Puseyism
http://www.onlineencyclopedia.org/l/li/list_of_isms.html   (583 words)

  
 Pointless nationalism: Turanian
*See also, "Pan-Africanism, Pan-Arabism, Pan-Slavism and Turanian nationalism: progressive or reactionary?"
The Victory shall be ours!" --Opening web page statement of the Japanese Nazi Party
[Boldface all mine.] "It was the Young Turks (1908-1917), however, inspired by neo-fascist and pan- Turanian ideologies, who decided to rid themselves (under the cover of World War I) of the Armenians."
http://www.etext.org/Politics/MIM/countries/turkey/turanian.html   (583 words)

  
 Henry Sylvester Williams Biography / Biography of Henry Sylvester Williams Biography Biography
It was this conference which gave currency to the term pan-Africanism.
Williams did not succeed in organizing a second Pan-African Conference, partly because of shortage of funds--perhaps partly, too, because of doubts of black leaders as to the efficacy of such conferences.
It was attended by some 30 delegates from the United States, Liberia, and Ethiopia, among whom were the African Americans Alexander Walters of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (Williams's chief collaborator) and W. Du Bois, who was to play a leading role in the five Pan-African Conferences held between 1919 and 1945.
http://www.bookrags.com/biography-henry-sylvester-williams/index.html   (702 words)

  
 The Majority Press New Marcus Garvey Library
Some Reflections on Evangelical Pan-Africanism, or Black Missionaries, White Missionaries and the Struggle for African Souls, 1890-1930.
Benito Sylvain of Haiti on the Pan African Conference of 1900.
Essays on the Pan African Conference of 1900, The Caribbean and Africa, C.L.R James, George Padmore, Black Missionaries to Africa, Frantz Fanon and more.
http://themajoritypress.com/prod01.htm   (605 words)

  
 Road to Pan Africanism
It was, however, the fifth Pan-African Congress held in Manchester, England, in 1945 that advanced Pan-Africanism and applied it to the decolonisation ofthe African continent politically.
The following is by Dr. Motsoko Pheko, President of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania and a member of the South African Parliament:
(The writer is deputy president of the Pan Africanist Congress.)
http://www.panafricanperspective.com/pheko.htm   (1159 words)

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